@lonemountain wrote:
... If you are more open minded and are wiling to look at moderate efficiency speakers in the mid 80s, using the wide array of excellent high power amplifiers available, or active speaker configurations, you can have your low distortion, wide dynamic range AND better bass AND wider dispersion, etc, etc. But you cannot have all that AND super high efficiency.
Sorry, but the above makes little sense to me.
If by "mid 80s" you mean sensitivity in dB's, then it's a very low efficiency design (i.e.: ~0.2%) and not "moderate" by any means. 105dB's sensitivity on the other hand translates to 20% efficiency, which is very efficient.
Contrary to your views I find efficient speaker designs - say, from 95-100dB's on up - to be the best way to achieve the combination of low distortion, wide dynamic range AND better bass, with the proviso that the latter requires large size to achieve a fairly deep extension, but that's not a design deficit nor a sonic impediment. And, if I'm to understand you correct, wide dispersion isn't a trait, but a characteristic; if anything a narrow and fairly uniform dispersive nature has advantages over a wide and likely uneven ditto.
Finally, high efficiency speaker designs can as well and advantageously be run actively. In fact I find that's where they really shine.